Everything About Volume & Audio Controls in VLC Media Player

VLC Media Player has several controls that can be used to control the volume of a playing media file. There are on-screen volume controls which you can slide up and down using the mouse to increase and decrease the volume. There also are hotkeys or shortcuts which can be used to easily control the volume straight from the keyboard. Similar controls for muting and unmuting the audio or setting it as stereo, mono, left, right or reverse stereo are also present. There are also options to disable the audio completely in an accompanying video. It is also possible to select the right audio in a video with multiple soundtracks and we can choose the correct audio output module if we have laptop speakers along with external speakers and earphones/headphones connected. Finally, we also found controls to remember the volume level settings and some additional effects which are built for the advanced users. We will talk about those audio controls to help you maintain a desired volume and sound effects at all times when playing media through VLC.

The Basics of Audio in VLC

On-Screen Volume Controls

On the bottom-right corner of the interface, there is the volume widget. The mouse or trackpad on your laptop can be used to reach that area to click and drag the volume level. We can make it go from 0% to 125%. Also, clicking on the volume icon will allow us to mute and unmute the player. This is the simplest way to control sound levels in VLC Media Player. The location of the volume icon can be edited by customizing the interface.

Menu Controls for Audio

The menu bar on top or the right-click options has a top-level menu called Audio which gives access to features that can be used for volume controls with some additional options. Here are what they are:

Increase, Decrease Volume and Mute. These are self-explanatory. We can make the sound go up, down or turn it off.

Hotkeys/Shortcuts for Audio

To save time or for our convenience, we can use keyboard buttons for volume controls in VLC Media Player. Such keyboard controls are called hotkeys in VLC. By default, we can use CTRL + Up Arrow or CTRL + Down Arrow to increase and decrease the volume respectively. The ‘M’ shortcut key can be pressed to mute or unmute the media. The J and K keys are for decreasing and increasing the audio delay by 50ms at a time. These hotkeys are configurable and we can change them to our liking. It is much quicker to use hotkeys in VLC Media Player.

Note: When a media file is open, using the hotkey, the audio can go up to a maximum of 200% but we have to be careful to not set it too high that our laptop speakers cannot handle it and our speakers might get damaged.

HDMI/SPDIF audio passthrough. It is disabled by default. We can Enable it for just AC3/DTS only or Enable it. Use the values to fix issues with HD codecs when using a HDMI receiver.

Device. Choose a default output device. If you have an earphone plugged in, it will be the default device. If we select our speakers as the default output device, even though we might have the headphones connected, our speakers should play the sound.

☑ Enable time stretching audio. Keep it enabled to maintain the pitch of the sound when playing the video and audio or just audio slower or faster than its normal speed.

Preferred audio language. If the audio in a video has multiple tracks like in English, Hindi, German, we can set the default one that VLC picks. Enter values like en, in, de, jp which are actually alphabetical country codes.

☑ Submit played tracks stats to last.fm. Many would find this option useless.

Hitting Save is mandatory after we have made the changes and we want them to last.

Audio Options for Advanced Users

Advanced Audio Preferences

What we talked about before is just the ‘tip of the iceberg’ of the audio settings that VLC has. It is enough for most of the users. Most would just be satisfied with the volume levels and having the option to select the audio language. The ‘Advanced Preferences for Audio’ are for professional users who have to dig into the specifics to get the right sound feedback. This is where every imaginable VLC settings for Audio are present.

To get to VLC’s advanced preferences for audio:

Go to Tools > Preferences [CTRL + P].

In the bottom, under show settings, click on All.

Click on Audio for the General audio settings.

There are various sub-items and sub-sub-items under it

Audio Sampler. For the Audio filters that are used to process the audio stream.

Filters. Check and activate the audio filter.

Output modules. Select an audio output module and a media role.

Visualizations. Choose a visualization and configure it.

Audio resampler

There are two sub-items under it.

Speex resampler. Set the resampling quality.

SRC resampler. Set the sample rate converter type like Sinc function, zero order hold or linear.

Filters

A range of filters is available for the advanced audio engineers and sound technicians. Several filters are available and can be activated. ☑ Check one or more than one to use them:

Once activated, the filters can be configured through the sub-menu items available under filters. For example: After activating the Parametric Equalizer, we can go to Audio > Filters > Parametric Equalizer and change the values for the several rows of frequency and their gain. The filters that are available in the sub-menu are listed as Audio pitch changer, Audiobar Graph, Compressor, Delay, Equalizer, Gain, Headphone Effect, Mono, Parametric Equalizer, Remap, Scaletempo, Spatialaudio, Spatializer, Stereo Enhancer, and Volume normalizer. They might not have the same names as the filters but we can match them like after activating ☑ Headphone virtual spatialization effect, we can probably use the ☑ Headphone Effect and when we have activated the ☑ Volume Normalizer checkbox, the Volume normalizer option can be accessed to set the value for audio buffers and maximal volume level.

DirectX. Choose output device to use the DirectX feature with. Float32 output can also be activated/deactivated. Speaker configuration can be switched from Windows default to Mono, Stereo, Quad, 5.1 and 7.1.

File. Choose an output file and format along with the number of output channels and enable/disable WAVE header.

WaveOut. Select an audio device between Microsoft Soundmapper and others available like Speakers (Realtek). Also, choose the number of Audio output channels.

Visualizations

Options to choose a visualization when playing audio. The available ones are Goom effect, libprojectM effect, Visualization filter, and 3D OpenGL spectrum visualization.

The submenus are there for configuration and additional options.

glSpectrum. Choose video width and height.

Goom. Choose display width, height and animation speed.

projectM. Choose path, font and different dimensions.

Visualizer. A set of options for the visualizer.

Final Words

These are all the direct audio-related options that are there in VLC Media Player’s simple and advanced preferences. Not everyone will use the advanced options and will never even have to touch it. The basic ones are more than enough for our media playing experience. There are additional audio related tweaks available in other places like Advanced Preferences > Input / Codecs > Audio Codec and even hidden deep inside Advanced Preferences > Stream output and its submenus. We hope you found this detailed guide useful. If there are any questions or things you’d like to add, leave them in the comments.